The importance of Almoners
The Freemasons are a family to us When she lost her husband and home, Paula Kilshawe-Fall faced emotional and financial chaos. Glyn Brown meets the…
Promoting the Fraternity across the World
The Freemasons are a family to us When she lost her husband and home, Paula Kilshawe-Fall faced emotional and financial chaos. Glyn Brown meets the…
Crystal Lodges WM, W. Bro David Powell recently presented a a commemorative Certificate and Badge to W.Bro.E.J.L Gimlett PProvGReg (which had been…
In 1783, Casanova met Benjamin Franklin in Paris. Franklin was not the only prominent man and mason that he would meet in his second round of travels. He would also meet Voltaire who he would eventually get into a philosophical battle with. He would also meet Mozart. At the time Casanova met Mozart, Mozart was composing his opera Don Giovanni, which was essentially like holding up a mirror to Casanova’s life. It is unknown how Casanova reacted to seeing what was essentially his life being shown as immoral, it is claimed that Casanova wrote lines for Don Giovanni but they were not used.
The Freemason is taught in the course of the First Degree that the Mallet is an important instrument of labour without which no work of manual skill can…
Edinburgh Register House MS 1696.txt Knoop, D; Jones, G P; Hamer, D;The Early Masonic Catechisms,Manchester University Press (1963)Second Edition, pp…
Thanks are due to W Bro Kevin Logan – Secretary of the Lodge of Remembrance No 4037 (Swindon/Wiltshire) and the Secretary of the Internet Lodge No…
Master Mason Peter Love (centre) together with two other friends had their ‘Santa beards’ shaved off for the Lingen Davies Cancer Fund, at the…
The inaugural shoot of the MMCSA was held at Tree Tops, Newport. The event was attended by three Monmouthshire Masons, one Wiltshire Mason and a non…
Changing faces As Freemasonry searches for new ways to build membership, Sarah Holmes learns what insights were revealed at an innovative light…
A symphony in red The gloom of summer had lifted. Twiddling thumbs on idle hands had now been usefully employed in fastening cufflinks and buttoning…